<p>I was home-schooled until 9th grade. Now I go to a competitive magnet (so technically public) school for the arts.</p>
<p>private Catholic all-girls school in New York. It’s pretty high ranked, I’m proud to be a student there :)</p>
<p>I’ve been to a private elementary school, then I was homeschooled, and now I go to a competitive public high school that is ranked in the top 150 in the country.</p>
<p>Public high school magnet. There are 2800 kids in the school, and 400 total in the magnet.</p>
<p>I think about 800 kids go to my high school. I live in the middle of nowhere and no one seems to want to leave except me. Granted, our high school is at least only 3 years old and is quite nice, but the academics suck and all anyone cares about is football.</p>
<p>Private school in 1st grade, then a public catholic all-girls school. The private school was way better imo</p>
<p>I go to a somewhat small public school in pennsylvania</p>
<p>A charter school Its like all the benefits of being a public and a private school, while having all the downsides of being poor.</p>
<p>Big public school in South Florida. It’s decent.</p>
<p>Private Christian school for kindergarten, an extremely small charter school for 1st-6th (only 20 per grade) , and a public school ever since. It’s in ranked in the top 100 by Newsweek.</p>
<p>I went to a lot of different elementary and middle schools (I went to 4 different schools in 1st grade alone). A mix of public and DoD schools.</p>
<p>I go to a relatively small public school in the south. Almost everybody either joins the military or goes to a community college after HS. A smaller percent go to a decent in-state university. Very few people go OOS, and those who do don’t go to top schools or anything like that. Very slow, quiet, boring school with no drama, for better or for worse.</p>
<p>small private school</p>
<p>Moderate size public school in GA. Lots of opportunity, you just have to take intiative. Block scheduling (4 periods) …but we are getting a new superintendent, so 7 periods next year. “Stoked”. But grateful.</p>
<p>I go to a very small charter school (200 kids). The great thing about Charters are that they can have their own curriculum–they don’t need to go by the school district’s rules. This gives opportunities to be really strange and unique, and that’s what we have. If I even tried to explain the grading system here it would be laughed at, but it’s totally effective.</p>
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<p>I know what you mean! My class size is 840 or so, and I don’t know half the people.</p>
<p>Fairly large midwestern public high school. Definitely one of the better schools in the area, but nothing amazing.</p>
<p>Large (~3000), urban, public school.There’s almost 700 kids in my class.</p>
<p>Small public.
I wish I went to a private school.
Religious schools & home schooling is definitely not the education I want to receive.</p>
<p>Smaller public high school (about 1200 students, 250 in my class)</p>
<p>Plus a half-day magnet school with 277 students split among three sites. My site has about 80 students total and 25 of us are seniors. There are probably about 85 seniors total in the program from like 14 different school systems. My site only serves 3 of the school systems involved.</p>